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I cannot count the number of times I stared longingly at the last remaining copy of 2007's 7994 City Harbour on the shelf at Toys R Us, but there always seemed to be something more important to buy. When that last set finally disappeared, I got that familiar hollow pang of regret, and wished I'd splashed the cash for what looked to be a lovely set. I was therefore overjoyed to learn that 2011 would bring us a whole new nautical line to LEGO's CITY range, and that among them would be a new Harbour set! I snatched it up as soon as it appeared on the shelves at TRU. Does this new Harbour fill the hole that my failure to buy 7994 left, or am I doomed to regret it forever? Read on to find out...

Review: 4645 Harbour

Name: Harbour

Number: 4645

Theme: CITY

Year: 2011 May Release

Minifigs: 4

Pieces: 551

Price: GB £71.99 | US $89.99

Price per part: 13.0 p | 16.3 c

The LEGO® City Harbor is bursting with activity!

It’s a busy day down at the LEGO® City Harbor as ships dock and unload their goods! Use the crane to unload the grain from the cargo ship, then drop it onto the conveyor belt and move it into the awaiting truck. The chief officer keeps his dock running smoothly as trucks and ships come and go full of cargo, while a fisherman is busy catching his dinner on the pier!

The smart blue surround, present on CITY sets since the start of the line in 2005, and a familiar feature of other ranges before then, frames an action-packed scene of the set against a stylised harbour background. Round tan bricks rain from the crane, and pelt from the belt into the waiting truck, while a distracted fisherman concentrates on his catch, ignoring the drifting ship approaching at his rear. The box designer has done well to demonstrate the play features all together in one diorama.

It's the bearded Captain's turn to reveal the play details on the box rear with his grandiloquent 'Hey!':

Click for a larger picture

The opening ship compartments, working crane, and tipping truck all get their moment. On the left is a panel describing the modular construction typical of CITY sets:

The crane jib intrudes somewhat into this area...

... as it does onto the box top:

Click for a larger picture

Here the rather measly inclusion of minifigures is supplemented by various accessories. I like the way the fisherman has tied up his rod, whilst proudly fondling his cod.

The Instructions

The three modules each get their own manual, the surface area and thickness of each corresponding to the relative size of that build. The manual for build 2 - the harbour itself - is of noticeably better paper quality than the other two...

... and also contains various extras at the rear. On the back cover is a diorama of the entire maritime range against a bunch of large town buildings that will sadly never make it into sets:

The complete maritime range is displayed in box format.

The build process is frustratingly simple and slow:

Here we're at step 29 and have added all of about eight pieces total to this section of the build. Piece callouts are not included, indeed unnecessary given that the instructions call for only one or two pieces per step. I reckon the instructions themselves are largely superfluous on this simple set.

Manual 3 - the ship - includes the set inventory:

Click on each page for a closer view.

Decal Sticker Sheet

My sticker sheet came out of the box only slightly curved, which is a blessing as so far I've seen no sign of the 'cardboard backed' instructions and stickers promised this year.

Click for a larger picture

It's a colourful range of stickers; I didn't apply them. Unlike my lucky wife, I only got one sticker sheet with this set. It is great to see the tie-in with the Farm range emphsised with these stickers.

The Parts

Bag 1 builds the truck:

It's the usual collection of plates, this time in red, white and bley, with a few colourful parts and one or two interesting pieces. The last include a City Corner Windscreen in solid red, and a dark bley 4x6 plate with hinge pins, set ID 92099, which I initially thought was the trap door part 30042, but is actually slightly different:

Four of these are included in the set, two dark bley and two white.

Bags 2 and 3 build the harbour:

Bley, blue and yellow are the featured colours; the parts selection consists mainly of large bricks and panels. There are some useful grille tiles, and bley plates; the 2x2 round plates in green, red and white on the left promise some Octan presence in this set

It's worth noting at this stage the two black fishing rods. One is spare; in contrast to the ones found in the Collectible Minifigure sets, these have a very small closed hole at the tip - no handy slit - inducing needle-threading anxiety as we shall see later.

Not bagged, some baseplates, a 6x16 plate, and a composite conveyor belt piece are also included in this part of the build:

I'm not sure how useful those baseplates will be

The conveyor piece, part 92715, I haven't seen before:

I'd rather have had some track and a little bit of Technic than this single piece, but I guess LEGO need to keep things simple for the kiddies.

Other pieces of interest:

The big crane piece I remember from when I was about 9! It's part 3492, and has been around since as early as 1976. The spring is looser than I remember, but I do recall that if the spring becomes dislodged it requires time, patience and tweezers to replace it.

Otherwise, there's a 16L steering arm, some 1x4 slopes with 'smooth' slope, some 2x2 round bricks with ridges, introduced with the Atlantis range, in red, and 2x2 round tiles in red which are probably commonplace but I haven't seen before in that colour. The big blue piece (see the underside here) is a train part, ID 87619, appearing here for the first time in blue.

Lastly, bags 4 and 5 build the ship's details.

White is the featured colour, with some plates in brown and green; the 8x8 grille plates in bley will be useful for sci-fi MOCs. The 2x2 corner panels, new this year in tan in the Pharaoh's quest line, make an appearance in white; the 36 tan round bricks are most welcome! Remember we also had 6 of these in bag 1, making 42 in total

Next we come to the boat base, loose in the box, and probably accounting for the size of both the box and the price:

This is actually two parts, pre-assembled in the box, and allows for the 'Boat really floats!' boast of the box cover, if that sort of thing... well... floats your boat It's a singularly useless feature, unless you get bored in the bath, but woe betide anyone who tries to re-enact Titanic adventures with the stickers applied.

The boat bottom isn't entirely featureless:

I'm not sure what the clip in the centre is for; perhaps it allows attachment of a motor, however precariously (and foolishly, since I'm sure LEGO motors aren't waterproof!) The 'gaps' at the sides presumably act as outriggers to prevent capsizing.

The two parts detach easily, revealing the non-standard connections:

This is actually a design feature; the instructions show this as a means to decant any bilge-water that accumulates during bathtime adventures.

The Minifigures

Four minifigures in a seventy quid set? Daylight robbery!! Actually not, considering the minifig selection in the larger Exclusive sets; however, it seems a little stingy for a play set like this, especially given the 4644 Marina - at just over half the price - has five. Anyhoo, here they are:

From the left, as I've named them: Frederick the Fisherman, Terence the Truck Driver, Clive the Crane Operator, and Captain Gerald. No ladies are permitted at the Harbour it seems . I'm not so keen on Clive's 'bad tan' eyes, which are mean to represent spectacles; none of these faces are new or particularly rare, and Freddie's face and hat combination might be more at home in the Police range. He looks a little miffed; perhaps he was hoping to catch a larger fish.

Their torsos aren't anything new, with the exception of Gerald's; his shirt and tie combo is supplemented by almost-invisible epaulettes and an anchor emblem to desginate his nautical role.

Only the farmer torso, seen before in the Farm range (7634 Tractor to be precise), has any back printing.

Their bare head-backs look dated now. Some rear printing on the heads would be nice, or some way of attaching hair and hat.

Build One: The Tipper Truck

I love LEGO's 6-wide trucks. They've got the cab design pretty-much perfect. New to this design is the use of the aforementioned solid-red windscreen to form the rear wall of the cab, and the tipper action. Let's have a look around.

From the side:

It's a three-axle truck, with mudguard pieces only used over the front wheels. I like the colour scheme, particularly the way the red and bley stripe continues down the length of the truck, but this has a price as we'll see. Note the 1x4 red tile attached SNOT to the front of the tipper section; this allows the tipper to sit flush with the cab when in the lowered position - nice touch! I'm not so keen on the fuel tanks, which are a little bland, and why use bley and black?

The front is typical for these trucks; an attractive design, but nothing new:

Notable for their absence on this truck are wing mirrors, which could easily have been attached via clips at the sides of the black stripe above the windscreen. The truck looks oddly incomplete without them from this angle. The 1x4 white panel on the roof is intended to host a sticker.

From the rear:

The usual tail lights flank a tile to which should be placed a vehicle registration sticker. The tipper is a simple construction of wall element panels on plates; two black 1x2 cheeses prevent the tipper's contents spilling too easily. I'd rather have seen a hinged panel here, but this is a minor point.

The underside is where the colourful pieces are hidden :

I don't know why yellow and blue were used, although when I MOC I tend to use random colours for hidden parts of models; perhaps this is why. Note also the right side fuel tank is different, using a printed Star Wars round tile instead of the black bits; I don't know why the fuel tanks themselves are white .

The cab has opening doors, made possible by the introduction of this piece which holds the windscreen securely:

The cab itself is a little bare - not even a gearstick breaks the monontony; there's also no handy place for Terry to put his mug. The price paid for the nice stripes along the side is the white floor of the cab, which looks a little odd here.

Under the tipper are some nice bley tiles:

The white fuel tanks appear especially incongruous against the bley. Take a closer look at the tipper mechanism: this is comprised of some SNOT bricks attached via clips to the 4x6 plate with hinge pins introduced earlier; four SNOT brackets then attach the tipper. It's an interesting technique, and probably the most advanced construction method in the entire set. The disadvantage is that the tail lights also move when the tipper is ... umm ... tipped.

Finally, the money shot: the truck with the tipper in the 'up' position.

The precious cargo of round tan bricks is deposited safely, and without bricks flying across the room into inaccessible nooks.

The truck is a relatively simple design, but attractive and functional, and makes a useful addition to the range of CITY trucks. It'd make a nice set in its own right.

Build Two: The Harbour

Bags 2 and 3 contain the most pieces, and come together to form the rather colourful harbourside structures. Straight away, you can see the area is dominated by the tall blue and yellow crane; besides that and the conveyor assembly there isn't really much to this. This is reflected in the build process, which is a little tedious; most of the parts are large blocks which don't require much brain-power to assemble, and as I've already commented the build crawls along.

Looking down at the set with this aerial view, the area looks especially Spartan:

The baseplates are rather plain, and the buildings somewhat insubstantial. Really they are simply structures to hold the crane up. A few minor details scattered around help to break the monotony. We'll now take a closer look at what the various structures have to offer.

The Crane

First up, there's the colourful crane. This is the one and only part of this set which seemed to have any thought put into it; the colour scheme of blue and yellow is quite striking, and the use of the blue train piece, bows and slopes contrast nicely with the long yellow jib, making this quite attractive. The red knob at the rear winds the windlass, which raises and lowers the grab-bucket; however, you can just move the jib to attain much the same effect.

Rant number one - String Theory

One thing I found really tricky is the string. It comes as a single piece one metre long, and you have to cut it to provide cable for the crane and line for the fishing rod; there isn't a guide in the instructions as to how long to cut each segment, requiring a degree of guesswork. Then you're left with two frayed ends which you have to thread through quite small orifices, inducing needlework terror in the average consumer, made worse by the lack of a slit in the distal tip of the fishing rod. I found this difficult; I dread to think what kind of porcine auricle the average six-year-old would make of it! The contrast to the soporific simplicity of the rest of the build is striking.

The crane jib consists of a dark bley Technic liftarm inside the long yellow crane arm; the former then meets a derrick piece at an angle. The steering arm also connects the latter to the crane cab roof, making a rough trapezoid that keeps the structure stable whilst allowing some movement:

Above the crane is at (nearly) full stretch ...

...and below, it's at minimum reach.

The derrick can also be extended by pulling the liftarm from the crane arm a little way ...

... allowing the grab bucket to reach the hopper of the conveyor:

I've placed it low over the hopper deliberately. Too high and there'll be a deluge of tan round bricks in unwanted places.

Access to the cab is granted by lifting the roof:

But this requires the jib to move into upright position, and doesn't allow that much room for big adult fingers to place Clive inside. The two levers only compound the problem; I was unable to get the levers into a position where Clive could hold them without disassembling the crane entirely.

The Conveyor

We've already seen the single composite piece that makes up most of this structure. The two red knobs turn to move the belt forward; the red slopes form a hopper allowing the cargo to fall onto the belt ready for moving. We'll see it in 'action' later.

The conveyor is held in place only by the two dark tan axles with stud towards the rear; these allow the whole conveyor to tilt backwards to about 90 degrees: an accident of design rather than functional feature I fear; I could see no use for this.

The Ancillary Buildings

Clive has a peek into his new office to find ...

... it's empty! Not even a coffee machine There's also no ladder or stairway to access the crane, requiring either the Hand of God or the magical gift of Levitation to allow Clive to do his job. Something brushes against his leg ...

Arrrrgh! A giant dirty rat!

The instructions call for Ratty to be placed here, next to the Mysterious Crate and near the eco-friendly green Recycle Bin. This picture also highlights another complaint about this set - the unsightly gap between the baseplates, which brings me to...

Rant number two - Caution: Beware Flooding

Why oh why oh why is the harbourside set apparently at sea level??? The floor of the harbour, and the road the baseplates form, is a mere baseplate-thickness above the waves, with a meagre brick-wall separating road from water. Surely the roadway should be raised? The use of baseplates here becomes deeply questionable: there is no way easily to modify the set to correct this anomaly, as bricks cannot be connected to the underside; either a large Bricklink order would be needed to create verisimilitude, or such a hefty dose of disbelief-suspension that I'm sure even the average six-year-old would struggle with.

This unsurpassable design flaw is more apparent at the other end of the harbour, where a plate forms a raised pier in a more sensible arrangement:

Various minor accessories decorate the otherwise bare harbourside area: there's a stand for broom and shovel; the promised Octan cylinder makes its appearance, and a new-style lamp-post illuminates the water, rather than the more logical option of the roadway.

The little pier forms a platform from which Freddie Fisherman can cast his line:

It's worth a good look at the rod here. Unlike that of the Collectible Minifigure fisherman, this rod requires you to tie the line at each end, once it is threaded (with great difficulty) through the infinitesimally-small hole in the rod tip. The red-and-white blob at the end of the line looks like it could represent a float; it seems to catch fish without the need for any cruel hooks.

A few minor - but much appreciated - features embellish the pier. The SNOT brackets with grille tiles make 'bumpers' to prevent ships being damaged by banging against the harbourside; I'd have liked to see these along the length of the wall rather than the single brown grille tiles used. The red-and-white warning beacon is a nice touch, but my favourite addition here has to be the Box of Fish

Build Three: The Ship

Lastly, we get to put a few pieces onto the big green thing. It's a cargo ship all right - it is recognisably a ship, and can carry cargo. What else does it have to offer? We'll find out, but first we'll have a good look around the outside.

The front is the most imposing view:

Here, a few bricks and a mast are the only decoration, but there's a nice perspective view up to the bridge.

This view from the side shows the bridge section near to the rear, with a little space behind:

The twin cargo holds are each covered with a bley grille plate attached to two 1x8 plates with door rail; these allow a little movement, as you can see from the forward hold. Yellow handle-tiles demarcate the holds, and apparent here is the open bridge, exposed on the sides to North Sea gales *shiver*.

This doesn't seem to bother Gerald, who looks happy to be at the helm, despite having no-one to help man the ship:

Note the small but nicely striped funnel; what purpose it serves I don't know - this ship has neither engine nor propeller. The open bridge with its green floor reminds me of a cross-Channel ferry: prior to the early Nineties - and the advent of the Channel Tunnel - it was the usual means for us Brits to access the great Continent of Europe and its plethora of cheap booze .

Also visible here are the radar mast, lever and binoculars (a horn?) that embellish the roof.

The roof lifts, allowing easy access to the bridge:

A steering wheel for the helm and a radar display are Gerald's only controls; at least he has somewhere to put his walkie-talkie.

The entire bridge lifts off to reveal a small cabin for Gerald to bed down for the night:

There's not much headroom there! If Gerald wakes with a start from some nautical nightmare he's going to get a rather sore head. This is all the more likely since, while he's snoozing down there, there is no-one piloting the ship.

Behind the bridge is a recessed area of unknown purpose; perhaps for recreation? Gerald is clearly suffering from the rough seas.

It's worth at this juncture mentioning the navigation lights - red for port, green for starboard . Yes, little details like this matter greatly to me.

The low-headroom, rather featureless cabin disappoints me a little, particularly when you consider there's a whole lot of wasted space beneath the cabin:

It wouldn't have added much to the piece count to put a door in the rear recessed area, with a full-headroom cabin beneath, surely?

The twin cargo holds are separated by fence-pieces, and hold the supplied quantity of round bricks with room to spare:

Some of this room is under the brown plate at the front, unfortunately rendering a few errant bricks out of reach of the grab bucket.

On the whole, the ship is okay, but it's a little on the small side when compared to that of the previous Harbour set, 7994. It's length is 38 studs from the rear of the tapered bow section, exactly the same as that of the 7287 Police Launch, which I suspect uses the same upper dark bley deck piece.

The Complete Set

Here are all three subsections together: the ship delivers her round, tan cargo, ready for the crane to lift it onto the conveyor, ready to deposit on to the tipper truck.

Seen next to the two-dimensional harbourside buildings, the ship doesn't look nearly so small, and gives the illusion that the set is rather more substantial than it really is. Looking beyond the size, the three main elements come together nicely, and form a colourful arrangement that does promise a load of fun play features, the centrepiece of which we'll look at presently.

Functionality

Now that the whole set is assemebled, we can have a good look at the main play feature of the set in action. The ship has arrived, carrying her precious cargo of Round Tan Bricks, but Gerald and Clive need to work together to offload them onto the waiting truck. Gerald uses his walkie-talkie to help Clive guide the grab bucket into the cargo hold (I don't know how, since Clive doesn't have a corresponding walkie-talkie; maybe he has the Power of Telepathy in addition to Levitation).

The tan rounds apparently represent grain; I'm happy to believe instead that they are much needed bricks for CITY construction projects. Grabbing the bricks is a bit hit-and-miss; I managed to load five or six after several unsuccessful attempts. The studded bottom of the cargo hold doesn't help here.

The loaded bucket is winched into the air:

The crane swivels and jib extends to manoeuvre the bucket over the hopper:

The bucket opens, depositing the bricks smartly onto the belt with the aid of the red slopes, and the conveyor carries them forward, eventually depositing them onto the back of the waiting truck:

Once the difficulty of grabbing the bricks in the first place is overcome, the process runs smoothly and works surprisingly well. Several foreseen snags didn't occur - for example, I was worried that bricks would fall into the small gutter either side of the conveyor belt, and either remain there for eternity or worse still jam the mechanism, but the belt carries them all the way. I anticipated bricks bouncing out of the truck onto the roadway, into the 'water' or - worse still - back into the ship, but they landed on the tipper and stayed there like the well-behaved little tan angels they are.

Admittedly I didn't try the process for all of the bricks, the Hand of God assisted with loading the remainder:

And we're ready to roll! Terry swigs the last of his tea and prepares to drive his delightful load off to ... wherever they need to go.

On the whole, the offloading action - the centrepiece of this set - works really well, and is fun in the process (though I can't imagine doing this for hours on end).

Conclusion

Having missed out on the previous Harbour offerings, I was looking forward finally to getting my hands on LEGO's latest seaport diorama. At face value, it seems to offer a lot: a sizeable ship, harbourside structures with working crane and conveyor, an attractive and useful tipper truck. However, now we've scrutinised the various features in some detail, some major flaws have started to show.

Compare this set to 2007's offering, the 7994 City Harbour:

Image from Brickset

7994 - a set I deeply regret missing out on - has a much larger, wider ship; a tall gantry crane with a longer reach; a container lorry, and a roadway likely to spared the threat of regular flooding. There's even a fisherman among the five minifigures. And all for three-quarters of the price!

Even 1991's 6542 Launch & Load Seaport had rather more to offer: (thanks Big Cam )

Image from Brickset

Ok, the ship is quite small, but there's a pilot launch and forklift in addition to the usual items, and it too has a raised platform.

Having built and reviewed LEGO's latest Harbour offering, I can't help feeling disappointed. It seems such a step down from the previous harbour incarnations, with second-rate buildings that look like mere support for the working features, a smaller than expected ship on an ugly hull, and flood-prone baseplates that are next to useless. And all this with a sizeable price-hike: blame inflation and the boat hull all you like, but at 13 pence per piece this set doesn't return nearly enough for your outlay.

I can forgive high prices if the overall end product is a thing of beauty, or a remarkable structure or talking point, but 4645 is none of those things. For me, it'll supply a few useful but rather expensive pieces to the collection, while the boat hull and baseplates will go into the useless parts bin next to the Fight in the Flying Wing's wing-piece.

Design 6 The set has a 'thrown together' feel. I suspect the designer concentrated on the crane function as top priority, and the rest followed. I can't forgive the 'sea level' harbour platform; the ship is ok but it's not a patch on the big blue leviathan from 7994. The saving grace is the crane function and conveyor, which work well as the central play feature.

Build 4 Possibly the dullest build I can recall, and the most over-simplified instructions, which are hardly necessary - a quick glance at the box will tell you how to build this thing. I imagine it will keep six-year-olds amused, but they'll be screaming for parental assistance when it comes to threading the winch cable and fishing line.

Playability 9 Here 4645 scores some points. There's plenty to do with this set: dock the ship, grab the bricks, swivel the crane, move the conveyor, load the truck, drive the truck, tip the cargo onto the floor, drive the truck into the the water, swing the crane so the bucket knocks over the figures and bashes the ship, sink the ship into the murky depths of the bath... loads of fun!

Figures 6 Four figures seems stingy, especially given the much cheaper Marina set has five. And these aren't so great - only the Captain has what I believe is an original torso. And where are the ladies? This is an enlightened age you know!

Price 4 For what you get, and considering how little that is compared to the previous harbour sets, 4645 is vastly overpriced. If you're thinking of getting it for your kids, wait till it's on sale.

Overall58%. I rate it 5/10. The most disappointing set I've built in a long time: LEGO, you can do better than this

Thanks for reading! Do let me know what you think of the review, and of the set itself.

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Wow, that is one brilliant review Rufus! You've covered every detail of the set and its elements and your photos are absolutely beautiful! The first picture is even more artistic than an official LEGO one!

On to the set. When I first heard the rumors regarding the release of a new harbour I was more than excited because the Maritime subtheme is my all time favorite and the last harbour that TLG released in 2007 (7994) was a really great set for my standards. I wasn't thrilled when I first saw photos of the new one and although that this review shows every detail of it I'm still not impressed.

The major flaw is (surprise,surprise!) the dock. Flat baseplates? Come on...I own the Intercoastal Seaport (this is my favorite piece for creating harbour docks) and the 2007 Harbour and the comparison is really inevitable.

The concept of this harbour is quite good but lacks in execution in many points. I love this type of crane but the structure/building is way too simplified (even for classic town standards if you ask me). The conveyor belt is a very nice idea.

Not too much to comment regarding the boat. It's simple and it's OK I guess. The bridge/accomodation part could have been a little more detailed though (the one on the 7994's ship was much better).

Anyway, sorry if I was a bit hard with this set, I guess I was expecting something else.

Thanks again for the fantastic review Rufus, you're awesome!

Their torsos aren't anything new, with the exception of Gerald's; his shirt and tie combo is supplemented by almost-invisible epaulettes and an anchor emblem to desginate his nautical role.

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Now that I have an even better view of the entire set, I am more disappointed to see even more short-comings in this set This is coming from someone who have owned and reviewed the 1991 6542 set.

I agree with you on the dock, it is simply not right to have it not raised while the small pier for the fisherman is raised. TLG could use some large plates to make the raised portion like those creator sets. The dock "wall" does not have any hooks to secure the ship to the dock. Then again, the ship does not have any hook to tie to the dock anyway.

Below is a comparison shot between this set and 6542.

Looking at the large green ship, it is very bare and lacking all the accessories or features of other Lego ships. The front does not have an anchor or hook. The superstructure of the ship is terrible as the bridge is open on both sides and the bridge is small for a large ship. There is even no proper way of removing the huge fence pieces other than totally removing it. A hinge cargo bay door would be preferred. It does not help that the captain got to do EVERYTHING I mentioned above on his own

Another comparison shot between the green boat and the red ship from 6542.

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Okay... normally, I don't give very thorough feedback on reviews, but this one is so loaded down with inaccuracies and uncertainties (almost all minor ones) that I feel I might as well go the extra mile here.

The Instructions

The build process is frustratingly simple and slow:

Here we're at step 29 and have added all of about eight pieces total to this section of the build. Piece callouts are not included, indeed unnecessary given that the instructions call for only one or two pieces per step. I reckon the instructions themselves are largely superfluous on this simple set.

This is an accusation I often heard leveled against BIONICLE sets back when I was extremely active in that community. However, something that's often ignored is that not everyone has the sort of thinking patterns that make LEGO building so easy. Back when I was nine or ten years old, I had a LEGO-themed birthday party, and my dad bought several of the then-current ThrowBots/Slizers sets for people to build for a disc-throwing competition. It surprised me how many kids at the party had difficulty following the simple pictorial instructions-- many would put pieces in the wrong places or at the wrong angle. Yes, it was a Technic build and thus arguably more advanced than a City set, but these were kids well within the Technic age range. Clearly for some people the visual-spatial qualities of LEGO building can be a challenge.

I have had a number of similar experiences when building a set with someone who's less adept at the process, and witnessed even more when watching friends build independently. So we can't always assume that everyone understands the simplicity inherent to the building process in LEGO City sets.

Decal Sticker Sheet

My sticker sheet came out of the box only slightly curved, which is a blessing as so far I've seen no sign of the 'cardboard backed' instructions and stickers promised this year.

It's a colourful range of stickers; I didn't apply them. Unlike my lucky wife, I only got one sticker sheet with this set. It is great to see the tie-in with the Farm range emphsised with these stickers.

The cardboard backing has so far been seen mainly in D2C sets and other sets of comparable size. I imagine it will be a while before the transition is made to doing this in all sets (if that happens at all). In any event, it doesn't really bother me as I've never had any real disasters with sticker sheets or instruction booklets. Like the one you have pictured, they have often been bent when I open a set but almost never creased, and once applied they don't make any real difference.

The Parts

I'm not sure how useful those baseplates will be

...And yet you know that AFOLs would be whining to no end if regular plates like the new 8x16 or 16x16 ones were used instead. To be honest, I'd have preferred those I think-- that way the end product would have been more sturdy, and there'd be no awkward unevenness between the bottom of the main dock and the supports for the small pier that the fisherman fishes from.

Lastly, bags 4 and 5 build the ship's details.

White is the featured colour, with some plates in brown and green; the 8x8 grille plates in bley will be useful for sci-fi MOCs. The 2x2 corner panels, new this year in tan in the Pharaoh's quest line, make an appearance in white; the 36 tan round bricks are most welcome! Remember we also had 6 of these in bag 1, making 42 in total

The 2x2 corner panels actually made their first appearance last year in the LEGO Games set 3862 Harry Potter Hogwarts. But it was also in tan there, so this is indeed its first appearance in white as far as I know.

Next we come to the boat base, loose in the box, and probably accounting for the size of both the box and the price:

This is actually two parts, pre-assembled in the box, and allows for the 'Boat really floats!' boast of the box cover, if that sort of thing... well... floats your boat It's a singularly useless feature, unless you get bored in the bath, but woe betide anyone who tries to re-enact Titanic adventures with the stickers applied.

During my childhood, I had a custom sticker with my name on it, made from a label-maker. It was applied to the boat piece from 4011 Cabin Cruiser. The adhesive never came off from it being in the bathtub or swimming pool, and despite the stickers in today's sets being paper-based rather than plastic-based I don't think they'd have any problems with coming off in the water unless you were really rough with the set.

The boat bottom isn't entirely featureless:

I'm not sure what the clip in the centre is for; perhaps it allows attachment of a motor, however precariously (and foolishly, since I'm sure LEGO motors aren't waterproof!) The 'gaps' at the sides presumably act as outriggers to prevent capsizing.

The bolded text is the big error that made me feel I ought to respond to this review more thorougly. You see, the motor that attaches at that point actually is waterproof and was specially-designed for LEGO boats (hence why most boat bases these days have that attachment point on the underside). It debuted in this 4 Juniors set and has since appeared in several City sets.

This is actually a design feature; the instructions show this as a means to decant any bilge-water that accumulates during bathtime adventures.

I'm very grateful for this feature. I've had several bath toys that couldn't open this way get quite grody inside. Plus, being the curious child I was, I managed to get pieces lost inside the base of the aforementioned Cabin Cruiser boat piece-- including, if I recall, at least one chrome Aquazone harpoon (don't ask how I did this).

The underside is where the colourful pieces are hidden :

I don't know why yellow and blue were used, although when I MOC I tend to use random colours for hidden parts of models; perhaps this is why. Note also the right side fuel tank is different, using a printed Star Wars round tile instead of the black bits; I don't know why the fuel tanks themselves are white .

One reason for this that I've read (specifically in this case referring to BIONICLE sets, but also applying here) is that when too many parts of the same color are attached to each other, it makes it difficult for kids to follow the instructions. For this reason the instructions often like to alternate between colors whenever possible, and use vivid contrasting colors in areas that aren't likely to be seen in the finished model. It is very jarring here where it's so plainly visible from underneath, but I'm not the sort of person who feels cheated when mismatched colors are used for interior structure or other hidden parts of a model.

The instructions call for Ratty to be placed here, next to the Mysterious Crate and near the eco-friendly green Recycle Bin. This picture also highlights another complaint about this set - the unsightly gap between the baseplates, which brings me to...

Rant number two - Caution: Beware Flooding

Why oh why oh why is the harbourside set apparently at sea level??? The floor of the harbour, and the road the baseplates form, is a mere baseplate-thickness above the waves, with a meagre brick-wall separating road from water. Surely the roadway should be raised? The use of baseplates here becomes deeply questionable: there is no way easily to modify the set to correct this anomaly, as bricks cannot be connected to the underside; either a large Bricklink order would be needed to create verisimilitude, or such a hefty dose of disbelief-suspension that I'm sure even the average six-year-old would struggle with.

While I agree this is a design flaw, I'm actually becoming quite grateful for its appearance in this set since it helps demonstrate something I've been trying to tell fellow AFOLS for a long time: baseplates are not the solution to all of life's problems. They're large pieces, so needless to say they drive up most sets' prices, all for a part that in general is one of the least versatile imaginable. AFOLs, unaware of the irony, suggest that an improvement on this set would be to have blue "water plates"-- something I generally disapprove of in any set containing boats since it constrains your "play area" with the boat to the tiny space the baseplate allows, instead of letting you imagine your own more spacious waterways. With that said, the use of baseplates here doesn't strain my own suspension of disbelief too much, unlike in the case of this set where, instead of ground level and sea level being the same all across it, the baseplate has sea level at an incline.

Anyway, that's all I really have to comment on-- anything else, you can assume I agree with. Yes, the 2007 harbor is superior in a number of ways, which is quite ironic since it defies so many conventions AFOLs insist upon. It had no baseplates, a lot of large, "&lt;insert that tiresome argument&gt;" pieces, and an oversized vehicle-- and yet it ends up being generally recognized by AFOLs as the superior set. This is part of the reason that I personally consider the impact of these things on a set's quality on a case-by-case basis. Not being a City collector myself, it doesn't really impact my buying habits which harbor is superior, but I do pay close attention to City as the theme sets the "standard" for most modern, real-life subject matter, and that impacts all of my MOCing habits (even for MOCs in themes like Agents that defy the City theme's conventions).

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I was worried there for a moment that you might use your amazing reviewing skills to sell me on a set that I'm really not keen on. With that out of the way, I can congratulate you on a fantastic review - of a set that remains to be judged in a sensible way!

I really wanted to like this set, but alas it is just not up to my standards. I'm a huge fan of the Farm line, but even the inclusion of the green boat cannot sway me. Despite my general enthusiasm for sets with lots of playability, far too many other aspects of this set were compromised in order to achieve that. I went on a longer rant in the other review of this set from a little while ago, but I don't feel like getting myself worked up again so I'll stop here.

Maybe I'm not quite finished yet...

This is an accusation I often heard leveled against BIONICLE sets back when I was extremely active in that community. However, something that's often ignored is that not everyone has the sort of thinking patterns that make LEGO building so easy. Back when I was nine or ten years old, I had a LEGO-themed birthday party, and my dad bought several of the then-current ThrowBots/Slizers sets for people to build for a disc-throwing competition. It surprised me how many kids at the party had difficulty following the simple pictorial instructions-- many would put pieces in the wrong places or at the wrong angle. Yes, it was a Technic build and thus arguably more advanced than a City set, but these were kids well within the Technic age range. Clearly for some people the visual-spatial qualities of LEGO building can be a challenge.

I have had a number of similar experiences when building a set with someone who's less adept at the process, and witnessed even more when watching friends build independently. So we can't always assume that everyone understands the simplicity inherent to the building process in LEGO City sets.

But people were able to build Lego sets for decades using instruction manuals with less luxuries than modern day ones. At the age of 5 I was able to build fairly large sets without too much difficulty (except if there was string...), and usually 10+ pieces were added each step with no special indication of where they went. Whenever I build modern sets I often find myself flipping a couple pages ahead between steps so that I can add more than 1-2 pieces. I believe TLC has gone a bit too extreme with the simplicity of their manuals. I have a larger stack of manuals from the past 3 years of collecting than I do from the 20 years before that - simply because manuals are so much longer or else there are multiple ones.

...And yet you know that AFOLs would be whining to no end if regular plates like the new 8x16 or 16x16 ones were used instead. To be honest, I'd have preferred those I think-- that way the end product would have been more sturdy, and there'd be no awkward unevenness between the bottom of the main dock and the supports for the small pier that the fisherman fishes from.

I think Rufus was complaining more about the thin baseplates as opposed to the inclusion of baseplates. The general consensus seems to be that most of us want raised road plates for our harbours. While I'm on the topic of baseplates, it seems as though most AFOLs aren't opposed to regular 16x32 or 32x32 baseplates, but instead it's the elaborate raised ones that they are less keen on. I think you mistake that sometimes.

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Great review Rufus. The first picture of the review is a great presentation of the set. It looks better and definitely more impressive than the official box art. However, sorry to rub it in, I'm glad I managed to get 7994 (in a somewhat beaten up box) at a pretty nice discount a while back.

The thing that made this set really stand out when the first pictures of the mid-2011 City line-up first surfaced was the color scheme of the 'building' and crane. But I quickly realized it was solely because of it's resemblance to 6363 Auto Repair Shop (nostalgia ). And while I like the idea of keeping the farm theme alive in this new subtheme, I still would have preferred 'traditional' containers as cargo. The crane is really inferior to the crane in 7994, which allows the reach of the arm to be controlled separately. I like the play features of this set, but the conveyer belt is a little bulky for my taste. The truck is nice, albeit a little simple. The dock could have been really good if they would have constructed it the 'Creator way', with a combination of big plates and 8x16 tiles.

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Thanks for the more than excellent review Although I think that the negativity about this set is just too much. I can remember that many people where not happy with the junorization of 7447. Even the crane (which people say was a good point) couldn't handle large loads and was very easy to break. I don't think however this set is better than the last harbour. I would've liked a similar one only with a green ship (same hull) and a different dock

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Thanks for the info, prateek - I wasn't aware of those motors. I'll edit your handy info into the review.

Nice review, I think I may still get this set. But still wish I had gotten the former

Me too

Wonderful review! As an owner of 7994 this set isn't highly compelling, but I still haven't got a hull of that design so we'll see!

I have a question/photo request; the bucket. Is it the same old one?

Thanks, Sieggy! To answer your question, I dug my old one out of the attic, and (age, scratches and replacement rubber band notwithstanding) it's pretty much identical:

I had forgotten I had lost the spring. The rubber band might explain why I found thee new one's spring surprisingly loose

On to the set. When I first heard the rumors regarding the release of a new harbour I was more than excited because the Maritime subtheme is my all time favorite and the last harbour that TLG released in 2007 (7994) was a really great set for my standards. I wasn't thrilled when I first saw photos of the new one and although that this review shows every detail of it I'm still not impressed.

The major flaw is (surprise,surprise!) the dock. Flat baseplates? Come on...I own the Intercoastal Seaport (this is my favorite piece for creating harbour docks) and the 2007 Harbour and the comparison is really inevitable.

The concept of this harbour is quite good but lacks in execution in many points. I love this type of crane but the structure/building is way too simplified (even for classic town standards if you ask me). The conveyor belt is a very nice idea.

Anyway, sorry if I was a bit hard with this set, I guess I was expecting something else.

Thanks, Zorbo! I've been harsher with this set than with any before, but it deserves it if you ask me. As you say, it certainly 'lacks execution'.

I do believe you're right . 4645 isn't inventoried on either Bricklink or Peeron yet, which makes it difficult to check things like this. I'll edit the review.

I agree with you on the dock, it is simply not right to have it not raised while the small pier for the fisherman is raised. TLG could use some large plates to make the raised portion like those creator sets. The dock "wall" does not have any hooks to secure the ship to the dock. Then again, the ship does not have any hook to tie to the dock anyway.

Below is a comparison shot between this set and 6542.

Looking at the large green ship, it is very bare and lacking all the accessories or features of other Lego ships. The front does not have an anchor or hook. The superstructure of the ship is terrible as the bridge is open on both sides and the bridge is small for a large ship. There is even no proper way of removing the huge fence pieces other than totally removing it. A hinge cargo bay door would be preferred. It does not help that the captain got to do EVERYTHING I mentioned above on his own

Another comparison shot between the green boat and the red ship from 6542.

Thanks paanjang, especially for the comparison pictures. I think they say it all - this harbour is pathetic by comparison.

I love the old ships they were great in size and detail.

This is a excellent review, but I don't think I will buy this.

I don't blame you.

Okay... normally, I don't give very thorough feedback on reviews, but this one is so loaded down with inaccuracies and uncertainties (almost all minor ones) that I feel I might as well go the extra mile here.

Thank you for the detailed feedback Aanchir, I will post an equally detailed response later.

I really wanted to like this set, but alas it is just not up to my standards. I'm a huge fan of the Farm line, but even the inclusion of the green boat cannot sway me. Despite my general enthusiasm for sets with lots of playability, far too many other aspects of this set were compromised in order to achieve that. I went on a longer rant in the other review of this set from a little while ago, but I don't feel like getting myself worked up again so I'll stop here.

Thanks, ZO6, I quite agree. It's all really about the crane/conveyor, and all else - design, aesthetics, figures, build enjoyment - were sacrificed.

Great review Rufus. The first picture of the review is a great presentation of the set. It looks better and definitely more impressive than the official box art. However, sorry to rub it in, I'm glad I managed to get 7994 (in a somewhat beaten up box) at a pretty nice discount a while back.

The thing that made this set really stand out when the first pictures of the mid-2011 City line-up first surfaced was the color scheme of the 'building' and crane. But I quickly realized it was solely because of it's resemblance to 6363 Auto Repair Shop (nostalgia ). And while I like the idea of keeping the farm theme alive in this new subtheme, I still would have preferred 'traditional' containers as cargo. The crane is really inferior to the crane in 7994, which allows the reach of the arm to be controlled separately. I like the play features of this set, but the conveyer belt is a little bulky for my taste. The truck is nice, albeit a little simple. The dock could have been really good if they would have constructed it the 'Creator way', with a combination of big plates and 8x16 tiles.

Cheers Rick! There's an element of Classic Town charm here, but it's minimal. I too would have liked traditional cargo, but then I would prefer to have 7994 over this.

Thanks for the more than excellent review Although I think that the negativity about this set is just too much. I can remember that many people where not happy with the junorization of 7447. Even the crane (which people say was a good point) couldn't handle large loads and was very easy to break. I don't think however this set is better than the last harbour. I would've liked a similar one only with a green ship (same hull) and a different dock

Thanks, Brickviller - if I came across as negative it's because I'm very disappointed in the set. I don't know which set 7447 is, I'm afraid - would you be able to provide a link?

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Thanks 'Rufus' for this MEGA-review, man it's a long one. I actually like this set, the crane mechanism area is so old school classic town look and that what this set is for a town not a city. Be that a river town or a small seaside port, now that truck is quite realistic....yep finally we are getting realistic cabs......though the yellow and blue on the bottom....odd ?

The boat looks fantastic looking from the bow of boat, but I do agree that dock could be subject to flooding....hey I must be right it is for a river town !

This one is equal number one on my mid-year shopping along with the marina...you know when I do I should rebuild my 7994 city harbour along with this and post some images to compare between the two which is better or worse.

Brick On Everyone !

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too bad, a very good review for a not so good set. personally, I will not buy this set! if lego decided to make a more container oriented set, I would have spent some time on thinking about it, but even if grain is a good integration to the farm line, it's still not much appealing to me, and I also see this set as a very &lt;insert that tiresome argument&gt; one.

it's ok for the ship hull, but as you pointed out, either the conveyor belt and also many details missing, not to mention the "not raised" baseplates, make this set (imho) a fail.

this time I'll pass, it will be for next year...

have a nice lego day

mrBlue

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I voted "Average" for this set. The price tag is high for what you get, $60-75 would be better. The boat is alot smaller than the 07 one. The comparison pictures of the 07 Harbor and the past great ones leave me wanting more. For the next harbor set hopefully we will see a bigger ship, better dock with office, truck, forklift, pilot boat and crane all for a reasonable price

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I was worried there for a moment that you might use your amazing reviewing skills to sell me on a set that I'm really not keen on.

Haha I felt the same way too prior to reading this, good thing despite the excellent review I'm still not sold on this set. It's average at best to me, with no particular element that interests me so it's an easy pass for me. On the brighter side, it's always a pleasure reading through your comprehensive and in-depth review Rufus!